logo
Russia and Republika Srpska sign education partnership deal

Russia and Republika Srpska sign education partnership deal

Russia Today12-06-2025
Russia and Republika Srpska, an autonomous region within Bosnia and Herzegovina, have signed a memorandum to expand cooperation in education. The ceremony took place on the sidelines of the Third International Forum of Ministers of Education, 'Shaping the Future', in the Russian city of Kazan.
The deal was signed by Russian Education Minister Sergey Kravtsov and Republika Srpska's minister of education and culture, Zeljka Stojicic, on Wednesday. Under the agreement, both parties committed to closer cooperation in general education, vocational training, and further vocational education. They will also exchange information on international conferences, seminars, and education-related events hosted in Russia and Republika Srpska.
The sides also discussed deepening bilateral ties at the forum.
'I would like to express my gratitude to the Srpska side for their active cooperation. We have already opened five Russian language open education centers in Republika Srpska. Around 500 citizens have studied in them over two years,' Kravtsov said.
Stojicic noted that the two sides have made notable progress in expanding Russian language instruction in Republika Srpska.
'We have made great progress in Russian language studies. The number of schools where the Russian language is studied has increased,' she stated, noting that Russia's Tula University was helpful with this endeavor. According to Kravtsov, the university has been working with Republika Srpska's education sector, and signed agreements with the region's specialized ministries in 2023.
A key part of the agreement signed by the parties includes promoting Russian language studies in Republika Srpska through competitions, Olympiads, and cultural events, as well as encouraging the use of electronic education resources. The two also pledged to support student talent development, organize children's recreation programs, and hold reciprocal fairs, seminars, and exhibitions.
This year's 'Shaping the Future' forum – held June 11 to 12 – brought together delegations from 50 states, including education ministers and officials from the UAE, Belarus, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Myanmar, Laos, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, and Zimbabwe. The agenda focused on global challenges in education, including digital transformation, AI, online learning, inclusion, and the evolving role of teachers.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ukraine accuses NYT of spreading ‘Russian propaganda'
Ukraine accuses NYT of spreading ‘Russian propaganda'

Russia Today

time2 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Ukraine accuses NYT of spreading ‘Russian propaganda'

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry has accused the New York Times of propaganda after its reporter traveled to the part of western Russia which previously came under attack by Ukrainian troops. Kiev took issue with the July 12 story by Times journalist and photographer Nanna Heitmann, who described life in the Kursk region, which borders Ukraine. In August 2024, Ukrainian forces crossed Russia's internationally recognized border and captured the small city of Sudzha and dozens of villages, but were eventually expelled last April. Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky said at the time that the incursion was meant to acquire leverage for future peace talks. 'Whoever at Times thought it was smart to report alongside Russian war criminals made the dumbest decision. This isn't balance or 'the other side of the story.' This is simply letting Russian propaganda mislead the audience,' Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Georgy Tikhy wrote on X on Saturday. Heitmann, who said she was at times escorted by the Chechnya-based Akhmat unit, took photos of Russian soldiers patrolling the destroyed villages, clearing mines, and helping to evacuate civilians. She spoke to locals whose homes were damaged by the fighting, and visited a shelter for evacuated civilians. The journalist said she observed the bodies of civilians and soldiers, claiming that 'the uniforms visible among the fallen were mostly Russian.' 'Amid shattered homes, other bodies had lain decomposing for months, seemingly untouched, the circumstances of their deaths unknown,' Heitmann wrote. She reported that some locals criticized the government for not evacuating everyone in time, but mentioned that Russian officials denied these claims and said more than 150,000 people were evacuated from the region. Ukrainian troops allowed multiple Western news crews, including CNN, France 24, El Mundo and Deutsche Welle, to accompany them during the incursion and to report from occupied Sudzha. Moscow subsequently charged several foreign journalists with border violations. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused the Western media of propaganda on Kiev's behalf and of covering up atrocities. According to Russia, Ukrainian troops massacred civilians in several villages, including Russkoye Porechnoye and Nikolayevo-Daryino.

New suspects emerge in Ukrainian plot to assassinate RT editor-in-chief
New suspects emerge in Ukrainian plot to assassinate RT editor-in-chief

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

New suspects emerge in Ukrainian plot to assassinate RT editor-in-chief

Three new suspects have emerged in a criminal investigation into an attempted assassination of RT Editor-in-Chief Margarita Simonyan, TASS has reported, citing court documents. The case, dating back to 2023, involved a group of Russian neo-Nazis who allegedly targeted Simonyan on orders from the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU). All the new suspects are underage, the news agency said, adding that the court has placed them under a restraining order. Their alleged role in the attempted assassination plot is unclear. Earlier, a Moscow court also told TASS that the pre-trial detention of other suspects in the case had been extended until October. In July 2023, Russian law enforcement announced it had thwarted a Ukrainian plan to kill Simonyan. The 'Paragraph 88' neo-Nazi group members were allegedly preparing an attack after being recruited by the SBU. The would-be assassins were caught carrying out reconnaissance in Moscow and Ryazan Region, according to the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB). During the operation, law enforcement seized a Kalashnikov assault rifle, 90 cartridges, rubber hoses, knives, brass knuckles, and handcuffs. The suspects then confirmed they were offered a reward of 1.5 million rubles ($20,000) for the murder, the FSB said. Simonyan expressed her 'deepest gratitude to our law enforcement officers for their work' following the operation. She also said that Kiev would have had a hard time justifying the murder of a journalist and mother of several children. Simonyan has been the editor-in-chief of RT since its founding in 2005, is married and has three children. Kiev has previously accused Simonyan of acting as a 'propagandist' and furthering 'Russian narratives' via social media and during interviews. Last year, the Ukrainian authorities launched a criminal case against her over 'propaganda of war' and 'denial of armed aggression by Russia.' In 2023, the SBU claimed she called for mass killings of Ukrainian children but failed to provide any evidence. The journalist then said that the false accusations against her were an attempt by Kiev to make a future attack on her 'appear more palatable.'

Istanbul talks format ‘exhausted itself'
Istanbul talks format ‘exhausted itself'

Russia Today

time4 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Istanbul talks format ‘exhausted itself'

The format of direct peace negotiations between Moscow and Kiev in Istanbul has 'practically exhausted itself' due to Russia's 'maximalist' demands, Ukrainian First Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Kislitsa has claimed. Russia and Ukraine have met for two rounds of direct negotiations in Türkiye this year, restarting talks that Kiev unilaterally abandoned in 2022. Russian President Vladimir Putin's goal for the ongoing US-backed talks is to demand Kiev's surrender in the conflict, Kislitsa said in an interview with the Kiev Independent published on Friday. 'Putin's mandate is to force capitulation. Their logic is the opposite of ours,' he said, arguing that the Russian position was worse than 'maximalist.' 'Our mandate had three points: first, ceasefire,' Kislitsa said. The second was to 'create the conditions' for a meeting between Putin and Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky, and the third included 'confidence-building measures' such as humanitarian issues such as prisoner swaps, he added. Putin has not refused such a meeting, but has argued that currently any final peace agreements signed by Zelensky would be illegitimate given that his presidential term expired in May 2024. Kislitsa insisted that a direct meeting between the leaders is necessary due to the 'complexity' and 'depth' of the conflict. He also argued that Moscow aims to 'bureaucratize' the talks. 'We saw this before in the endless Minsk process groups,' the diplomat claimed. 'Endless meetings – but there were no results.' The failed Western-backed 2014-2015 Minsk Agreements were ostensibly meant to freeze the conflict between Ukraine and the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk. Both former German Chancellor Angela Merkel and former French President Francois Hollande later admitted that the accords were a mechanism to stall for time and allow Kiev to rearm. Moscow has refused Ukrainian demands for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire, arguing that such a truce would be a repeat of the Minsk Agreements. Russia has maintained that any settlement needs to be permanent, legally foolproof, and it must address the core causes of the conflict. The Kremlin has also condemned French and British initiatives to deploy peacekeeping troops and fighter jets to Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire, blasting them as 'militaristic.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store